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Handbook of Digital Evidence: Reliable Forensic Computing
Contributor(s): Sommer, Peter (Editor)
ISBN: 0387954996     ISBN-13: 9780387954998
Publisher: Springer
OUR PRICE:   $53.96  
Product Type: Hardcover - Other Formats
Published: November 2006
Qty:
Temporarily out of stock - Will ship within 2 to 5 weeks
Annotation: Digital evidence is increasingly critical in an age of widespread Internet use, consumer-based email, digital contracts, digital correspondence, digitized business processes and records and digitized government. One needs to prove what went wrong in or near a computer--whether a major crime, a dispute about a failed contract to deliver goods or services, a minor dispute within a business, or just an accident that generates legal proceedings or an insurance claim. The challenge is how to capture that evidence in ways that meet the needs of the legal system and also convince judges and juries lacking computer expertise. The problems of "digital evidence" are not the exclusive preserve of elite cyber-sleuths chasing hackers across the Internet. Anyone who uses a computer, relies on computer data, designs computer systems, or advises those who do needs to understand where and how much evidence can be located, how it should be preserved free from contamination, how it may best be analyzed, and how to present it in statements, affidavits, and court. The "Handbook of Digital Evidence and Forensics" will provide coverage of: *some basic principles about forensic science--its obligations, disciplines, professional practices, etc. *the application and development of these principles to specific types of computer-derived evidence (such as documents, database records, data from disks and other storage media, and data intercepted in transmission) *specific procedures and techniques for safe acquisition, analysis and presentation of particular types of evidence *presentation skills for written and oral evidence
Additional Information
BISAC Categories:
- Computers | System Administration - Storage & Retrieval
- Computers | Information Technology
- Computers | Programming Languages - General
Dewey: 005
Physical Information: 530 pages
 
Descriptions, Reviews, Etc.
Publisher Description:
Digital evidence is increasingly critical in an age of widespread Internet use, consumer-based email, digital contracts, digital correspondence, digitized business processes and records and digitized government. One needs to prove what went wrong in or near a computer-- whether a major crime, a dispute about a failed contract to deliver goods or services, a minor dispute within a business, or just an accident that generates legal proceedings or an insurance claim. The challenge is how to capture that evidence in ways that meet the needs of the legal system and also convince judges and juries lacking computer expertise. The problems of digital evidence are not the exclusive preserve of elite cyber-sleuths chasing hackers across the Internet. Anyone who uses a computer, relies on computer data, designs computer systems, or advises those who do needs to understand where and how much evidence can be located, how it should be preserved free from contamination, how it may best be analyzed, and how to present it in statements, affidavits, and court. *some basic principles about forensic science--its obligations, disciplines, professional practices, etc. *the application and development of these principles to specific types of computer-derived evidence (such as documents, database records, data from disks and other storage media, and data intercepted in transmission) *specific procedures and techniques for safe acquisition, analysis and presentation of particular types of evidence *presentation skills for written and oral evidence